Report

France's balance of payments and international investment position 2020

Published on 20 July 2021

The shock unleashed by the Covid‑19 pandemic had a deep impact on international trade in 2020. Transactions between France and the rest of the world, described in the balance of payments, reflect the unprecedented nature of this crisis.

Against the backdrop of a massive global trade contraction, France’s current account deficit reached an exceptionally large EUR 43.7 billion, compared with EUR 7.1 billion in 2019.

  • Despite a smaller energy bill, the goods deficit widened by EUR 13.3 billion, notably owing to a deterioration in external trade in the aerospace sector.
  • The services surplus was particularly affected by the downturn in international tourism and narrowed by EUR 7.6 billion.
  • In 2020, France’s largest bilateral trade deficit was with China, which replaced Germany in this regard.
  • The fall in investment income caused the income balance to deteriorate by EUR 15.8 billion.

The financial account recorded net capital inflows of EUR 52.5 billion.

  • The increase in the current account deficit was financed by a net increase in foreign liabilities.
  • French net direct investment abroad amounted to EUR 40.3 billion.

The net international investment position deteriorated by EUR 78.7 billion.

  • At end-2020, it stood at –EUR 695.5 billion, and following the sharp contraction in nominal GDP, it exceeded –30% of GDP, but was still below the alert threshold of –35% of GDP set by the European Macroeconomic Imbalance Procedure.
  • With net purchases by the Banque de France resuming under Eurosystem programmes, the share of government debt securities held by foreign investors shrank from 55% at end-2019 to 52% at end-2020.

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